Industrial Environmental Management. Tapas K. Das

Читать онлайн.
Название Industrial Environmental Management
Автор произведения Tapas K. Das
Жанр Биология
Серия
Издательство Биология
Год выпуска 0
isbn 9781119591566



Скачать книгу

and Ayres, L. (1996). Industrial Ecology: Towards Closing the Materials Cycle. Cheltenham, UK: Edward Elgar.

      6 Cote, R.P. (1995). Supporting pillars for industrial ecosystems. Journal of Cleaner Production 5 (1–2): 67–74.

      7 Cote, R.P. (2003). A Primer on Industrial Ecosystems: A Strategy for Sustainable Industrial Development, 1–34. Halifax, NS: Eco‐Efficiency Center, School for Resources and Environmental Studies, Dalhousie University.

      8 Das, T.K. (2005). Toward Zero Discharge: Innovative Methodology and Technologies for Process Pollution Prevention. Hoboken, NJ: Wiley.

      9 Delmas, M. (2009). Erratum to “Stakeholders and Competitive Advantage: The Case of ISO 14001”. Production and Operations Management. 13 (4): 398.

      10 Graedel, T.E. and Allenby, B.R. (1995). Industrial Ecology. Englewood Cliffs, NJ: Prentice Hall.

      11 Grann, H. (1994). The industrial Symbiosis at Kalundborg, Denmark. Paper presented at the National Academy of Engineering's Conference on Industrial Ecology, Irvine, CA (9–13 May 1994).

      12 Herman, R. (1989). Technology and Environment. Washington, DC: National Academy Press.

      13 Hutchens, S. (2010). Using ISO 9001 or ISO 14001 to gain a competitive advantages. Intertake. www.intertek‐sc.com (accessed 21 September 2019).

      14 Johnson, J., Harper, E.M., Lifset, R., and Graedel, T.E. (2007). Dining at the periodic table: metals concentrations as they relate to recycling. Environmental Science and Technology 41: 1759–1765.

      15 Pauli, G. (1996). Breakthroughs. Haslemere, Surrey: Epsilon Press.

      16 Potoski, M. and Prakash, A. (2005). Green clubs and voluntary governance: ISO 14001 and firms' regulatory compliance. American Journal of Political Science 49 (2): 235.

      17 Sheldon, C. (1997). ISO 14001 and Beyond: Environmental Management Systems in the Real World. New York: Prentice Hall.

      18 USEPA (1992). Facility Pollution Prevention Guide, EPA/600/R‐92/088. Washington, DC: USEPA, Office of Research and Development.

      19 Van der Veldt, D. (1997). Case studies of ISO 14001: a new business guide for global environmental protection. Environmental Quality Management 7 (1): 1–19.

      20 World Commission on Environment and Development (1987). Our Common Future. Oxford University Press, Oxford, UK.

      21 Zacerkowny, O. (2002). Not a drop leaves the plant. Pollution Engineering 34: 19–22.

      2.1 Introduction

      Engineers in all disciplines practice a profession of those who must obey rules governing their professional conduct. One important set of rules that all engineers should be aware of is environmental statues, which are laws enacted by US Congress and governments of other countries around the world.

      Environmental law, also known as environmental and natural resources law, is a collective term describing the network of treaties, statutes, regulations, common, and customary laws addressing the effects of human activity on the natural environment. The core environmental law regimes address environmental pollution. A related but distinct set of regulatory regimes, now strongly influenced by environmental legal principles, focus on the management of specific natural resources, such as forests, minerals, or fisheries. Other areas, such as environmental impact assessment, may not fit neatly into either category but are nonetheless important components of environmental law.

      The objective of this chapter is to provide an overview of history behind present environmental laws and regulations and environmental pollution in various countries and continents. Much of the materials presented in this chapter has been adopted from various sources that include the following: United States Code (USC); Code of Federal Regulations (CFR); United States Environmental Protection Agency (USEPA); United Nations Environmental Program (UNEP); Centre for International Environmental Law; Environmental Law Handbook by Sullivan and Adams (1997); Environmental Regulatory Calculations Handbook by Stander and Theodore (2008); Environmental Law by Upadhyay (2012); Environmental Law and Policy in India: Cases, Materials and Statues by Divan and Rosencranz (2002); Craig, Selected Environmental Law Statutes, West Academic Publishing Co. (2016); Lynch (1995); Google; and Wikipedia. Most of these sources can be found online.

      Environmental law came into existence as a result of confrontation with the serious problems concerning environment, prior, during, and post Industrial Revolution. In response to environmental problems, laws seek to protect and promote environment. It is designed to prevent, control, and regulate environmental pollution.

      Environmental protection and its preservation is today's concern of all. Present environmental conditions in many parts of the world clearly indicate that human activities on the Earth are interconnected. Today society's interaction with nature is so extensive that environment questions have assumed all proportions affecting humanity at large. Environmental destruction and pollution have seriously threatened human life, health, and livelihood. Thus, there has been a thrust on the protection of environment all across the world. If the quality of life is to be assured to present and future generations, they should be saved from the environmental failures. Nature's gifts to humanity in the form of flora and fauna have to be preserved in natural form. The proper balance of the world's eco system is in urgent need. The only answer to tackle this problem is sustainable development. The purpose of environmental law is to protect and preserve our water, air, Earth, and atmosphere from pollution. But the law alone cannot tackle the problem of pollution. There has to be awareness of the problem and sustained efforts are required to manage it.

      Long‐term global population growth is difficult to predict. The United Nations and the U.S. Census Bureau both give different estimates – according to the UN, the world population reached about 7.31 billion in late 2015 (United Nations Secretariat 2015). Figure 2.1 shows a trend that the human population has been growing rapidly since the mid‐1800s, which goes hand in hand with the degradation of the environment's natural equilibrium.

      Population increase over the last two decades, at least in the United States, has also been accompanied by a shift to an increase in urban areas from rural areas (Wallach 2005), which concentrates the demand for water into certain areas, and puts stress on the fresh water supply from industrial and human contaminants (Water 2011). Urbanization causes overcrowding and increasingly unsanitary living conditions, especially in developing countries, which in turn exposes an increasing number of people to disease. About 79% of the world's population is in developing countries, which lack access to sanitary water and sewer systems, giving rise to disease and deaths from contaminated water and increased numbers of disease‐carrying insects (Powell 2009).

Graph illustrating the world’s population growth over 100 years represented 
            </div>
      	</div>
  	</div>
  	<hr>
  	<div class=